CSS Button No Image Css3Menu.com

Baseball Prospectus home
  
  
Click here to log in Click here to subscribe
<< Previous Article
Premium Article Rumor Roundup: Troy Tu... (12/23)
<< Previous Column
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (12/22)
Next Column >>
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (12/23)
Next Article >>
An Agent's Take: Getti... (12/23)

December 23, 2014

Transaction Analysis

Gently Hughes'd

by R.J. Anderson

the archives are now free.

All Baseball Prospectus Premium and Fantasy articles more than a year old are now free as a thank you to the entire Internet for making our work possible.

Not a subscriber? Get exclusive content like this delivered hot to your inbox every weekday. Click here for more information on Baseball Prospectus subscriptions or use the buttons to the right to subscribe and get instant access to the best baseball content on the web.

Subscribe for $4.95 per month
Recurring subscription - cancel anytime.


a 33% savings over the monthly price!

Purchase a $39.95 gift subscription
a 33% savings over the monthly price!

Already a subscriber? Click here and use the blue login bar to log in.

MINNESOTA TWINS
Team Audit | Player Cards | Depth Chart

Agreed to a three-year extension with RHP Phil Hughes worth $42 million. [12/22]

Here's what we know about Hughes:

  • he turns 29 in June;
  • he had two years, $16 million remaining on his contract;
  • he owns the record for the highest strikeout-to-walk ratio since 1950 (min. 100 IP);
  • he posted that mark while topping 200 innings for the first time;
  • and he did so while posting a better FIP than ERA for the third time in four tries.

Add it all up and Hughes' extension is a litmus test for how you analyze pitching and risk.

If you care only about strikeout-to-walk ratio, then Hughes just pitched one of the best seasons ever. By setting the single-season record, he joined a top 10 that includes Bret Saberhagen, Ben Sheets, Cliff Lee, Curt Schilling, Pedro Martinez, and Greg Maddux—all good to great pitchers. Of course the top 10 also includes Hal Brown—who, at age 38, posted an 8.5 strikeout-to-walk rate despite fanning a batter every other inning—and used to include Carlos Silva. There's a stinker here and there, yet generally speaking, if you perform to that level, you're almost certainly a good pitcher.

But nobody cares only about strikeout-to-walk ratio*. You might weigh it as 50 percent or 75 percent (or some other round number) of pitching. You might think it's more predictive than a season's worth of ERA. You might think it's the best single pitching statistic there is. Caring only about it though? Nonsense. That's why Hughes finishing seventh in Cy Young award voting didn't incite a panic, and that's why nobody considers his 2014 one of the best single-season pitching performances of all-time.

*The Twins surely don't, and yet, despite their anti-analytical reputation, take a look at their recent big pitching investments—Hughes, Ricky Nolasco, Ervin Santana, and so on. What do they have in common? Almost all of them looked better through the lens of FIP than ERA. Maybe it's a coincidence, maybe not.

Even so, let's not trivialize Hughes' season as a whole, because he did pitch well. On a rate basis, he still allowed plenty of hits, but he more than halved his home run rate. Additionally, he cut into his walk rate by having close to 75 percent of his pitches go for strikes. The move away from Yankees Stadium (and perhaps New York) helped, as did a renewed emphasis on not overthrowing. Perhaps the degree of Hughes' success in '14 is little more than a one-year anomaly; however, you should probably expect him to be an average or better starter in the short term.

That's an acceptable outcome—maybe even a good one—given the finances in place. Still, the other point of contention here is the timing. Why lock Hughes in for an additional three years now, some two years before he could hit free agency? The only line of thinking that makes sense is the Twins must view him as more than an average pitcher. If so and they let him pitch another year without an extension, then (in their estimation) he would've raised his stock and increased his likelihood to test the free-agent market after the '16 season.

In a sense, this deal is similar to the risk-reward gambits the Rays asnd Blue Jays (among others) have used on late bloomers like Ben Zobrist and Jose Bautista. That doesn't mean it'll work out—over a long enough timeline, most pitchers suffer some kind of injury, after all—just that the upshot here is Hughes settling in as an above-average starter who rewards the Twins' faith in him. The worst-case scenario is Hughes gets hurt or has a run of 2013-like seasons. And the most likely outcome? The tacked-on years mattering little either way.

R.J. Anderson is an author of Baseball Prospectus. 
Click here to see R.J.'s other articles. You can contact R.J. by clicking here

Related Content:  Minnesota Twins

3 comments have been left for this article.

<< Previous Article
Premium Article Rumor Roundup: Troy Tu... (12/23)
<< Previous Column
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (12/22)
Next Column >>
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: ... (12/23)
Next Article >>
An Agent's Take: Getti... (12/23)

RECENTLY AT BASEBALL PROSPECTUS
Playoff Prospectus: Come Undone
BP En Espanol: Previa de la NLCS: Cubs vs. D...
Playoff Prospectus: How Did This Team Get Ma...
Playoff Prospectus: Too Slow, Too Late
Premium Article Playoff Prospectus: PECOTA Odds and ALCS Gam...
Premium Article Playoff Prospectus: PECOTA Odds and NLCS Gam...
Playoff Prospectus: NLCS Preview: Cubs vs. D...

MORE FROM DECEMBER 23, 2014
Premium Article Baseball Therapy: Do Stars and Scrubs Lineup...
Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Catching On to the Cub...
An Agent's Take: Gettin' Lucky at the Winter...
Premium Article Rumor Roundup: Troy Tulowitzki Won't Be a Me...
Fantasy Article Fantasy Team Preview: Los Angeles Dodgers
Fantasy Article Fantasy Freestyle: Still Holliday Season

MORE BY R.J. ANDERSON
2015-01-05 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: The Byrd Has Landed
2014-12-31 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Rays Take A Cab
2014-12-29 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Grilli, Pierz In
2014-12-23 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Gently Hughes'd
2014-12-22 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Martin in Miami, Nate ...
2014-12-20 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Padres Wish Upton a St...
2014-12-19 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Catchin' Relief
More...

MORE TRANSACTION ANALYSIS
2014-12-31 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Rays Take A Cab
2014-12-29 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Grilli, Pierz In
2014-12-23 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Catching On to the Cub...
2014-12-23 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Gently Hughes'd
2014-12-22 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Martin in Miami, Nate ...
2014-12-20 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Padres Wish Upton a St...
2014-12-19 - Premium Article Transaction Analysis: Catchin' Relief
More...